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An analysis of closed medical litigations against the obstetrics departments in Taiwan from 2003 to 2012†.

Authors :
KUAN-HAN WU
HSIEN-HUNG CHENG
FU-JEN CHENG
CHIEN-HUNG WU
PAI-CHUN YEN
YUNG-LIN YEN
TE-YAO HSU
Wu, Kuan-Han
Cheng, Hsien-Hung
Cheng, Fu-Jen
Wu, Chien-Hung
Yen, Pai-Chun
Yen, Yung-Lin
Hsu, Te-Yao
Source :
International Journal for Quality in Health Care. Feb2016, Vol. 28 Issue 1, p47-52. 6p. 5 Charts.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>To examine the epidemiologic data of closed medical claims from Taiwanese civil courts against obstetric departments and identify high-risk diseases.<bold>Design: </bold>A retrospective descriptive study.<bold>Setting/study Participants: </bold>The verdicts from the national database of the Taiwan judicial system that pertained to obstetric departments were reviewed. Between 2003 and 2012, a total of 79 closed medical claims were included.<bold>Main Outcome Measures: </bold>The epidemiologic data of litigations including the results of adjudication and the disease and outcome of the alleged injury.<bold>Results: </bold>A majority of the disputes (65.9%) were fetus-related. Four disease categories accounted for 78.5% of all claims including (i) perinatal maternal complications (25.3%); (ii) errors in antenatal screening or ultrasound diagnoses (21.5%); (iii) fetal hypoxemic-ischemia encephalopathy (16.5%); and (iv) brachial plexus injury (15.2%). Six cases (7.6%) resulted in an indemnity payment with a mean amount of $109 205. Fifty-one cases (64.6%) were closed in the district court. The mean incident-to-litigation closure time was 52.9 ± 29.3 months. All cases with indemnity payments were deemed negligent or were at least determined to be controversial by a medical appraisal, while all defendants whose care was judged as appropriate by a medical appraisal won their lawsuits.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Almost 93% of clinicians win their cases but spend 4.5 years waiting for final adjudication. The court ruled against the clinician only if there was no appropriate response during a complication or if there was no follow-up or further testing for potential critical diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13534505
Volume :
28
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal for Quality in Health Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
113641806
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzv093